calendar>>January 14. 2009 Juche 98
KCNA Flails Lee Regime's Desperate Moves to Enact "Laws"
Pyongyang, January 14 (KCNA) -- What is noteworthy in south Korea under the Lee Myung Bak regime is its unprecedented moves to retrogressively revise the existing "laws" and enact new ones.

Recently the south Korean authorities worked hard to railroad 85 evil bills through the "National Assembly". They include the "bill on revising the law on Intelligence Service", the "bill on revising the ordinance on the effectuation of the law on broadcasting", the "bill on revising the law on the protection of communication secrets", the "bill on revising the law on assembly and demonstration", the "proposal for group suit", the "bill on combating terrorism" and the "bill on handling secrets."

In the first year of its office the Lee group turned south Korea into a theater of fascist rowdyism where illegal practices are rampant. As if it were not enough with this, the group is hell-bent on fabricating evil laws on a daily basis.

As well known, no sooner had traitor Lee taken office than he cried out for "establishing law and order," clamoring that he would consider the "rule of law" as "one of the three axes for state administration."

The first thing the Lee did under the pretext of "law" was his establishment of a fascist dictatorial system.

He restored a "political inspection system" dating back to the Yusin dictatorship in south Korea.

The "reorganization of government institutions" under the pretext of "efficient state administration" led to legalizing "one-man ruling system by the president" and putting the "Intelligence Service", prosecution and police under the control of "Chongwadae".

The Lee group reinforced the fascist system and machinery as evidenced by the fact that it brought back into force the "summary trial system", formed a "team specializing in arrest" and advanced a "proposal for strictly checking illegal group actions" and re-defined their missions and action regulations in such a manner that police can brutally crack down upon any demonstration.

The Lee junta confirmed the "bill on revising the law" related to media aimed at reducing them to levers for trampling down upon progressive media and reducing media to a waiting maid of power and a means for justifying the dictatorial system.

The group is keen to strictly ban even the slightest freedom of expression by putting media under its control through the projected revision of the "law on newspapers", the "law on broadcasting", the "law on information and communication" and four other laws.

The above-mentioned efforts to retrogressively revise the existing laws and enact new ones in south Korea are a direct product of the ruling crisis of the Lee group.

The group driven into a tight corner, being forsaken by the times and the nation for its dependence on outsiders and unpopular fascist rule, is trying to find a way out in enforcing a fascist rule.

Through the above-said moves the group seeks to lay a legitimate ground for realizing its dictatorial rule and suppress those people incurring its displeasure after branding them as "law breakers" under the pretext of "security."

It is none other than the south Koreans who are falling victims to the laws" now in force in south Korea because those laws brand the south Koreans' movement for independence, democracy and reunification as an "illegal one".

In fact, those people who have turned out in the struggle for the right to existence and democracy are subject to ceaseless fascist suppression on charges of violation of such draconic laws.

The Lee group is becoming evermore vociferous about "rule of law," while charging people from all walks of life struggling against its unpopular policy with "violation of law and order".

The most "laws" being enacted in south Korea are unpopular laws aimed to defend the conservative rulers and the policy for big businesses and put people in fetters.

The reckless enactment of "laws" by the treacherous rulers will only precipitate their own destruction for their reactionary nature.

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